IBM Breakthrough?

Robert A. Rosenberg hal9001 at panix.com
Fri Feb 23 21:50:30 PST 1996


At 21:03 2/21/96, Mike Duvos wrote:

>Now this has some interesting implications.  One of the problems
>with teleportation devices in Science Fiction stories is that
>they allow for the creation of duplicates.  They reduce an object
>to a pattern by measuring it, and then recreate it at a distance
>by assembling atoms of the same types according to the
>appropriate directions.  There is no theoretical reason why, once
>the pattern has been saved, this process could not be repeated
>multiple times.  This has implications for things like souls and
>self-awareness that many people would rather not think about.

Its been used in an SF Story/Series <g>. It is the Venus Equilateral Series
by George O. Smith. Midway into the Series, they invent a method of doing
Teleportation via destruction of the original item, sending the info to the
receiver, and recreating the object. In the process of a Court Case
involving if the transmission of the signal between the two Teleportation
Devices was a transmission of Energy (which was the province of the other
party in the case) or a transmission of Data (which was VE's job), they had
to invent a Duplicator (in the process allowing the non-destructive readout
of the transmission signal). It gets vary hairy for a story or two until
Civilization gets adjusted to the Duplicator (they have to invent something
that can not be scanned and thus duplicated to act as "Paper" for Money and
Contracts/etc since the bottom fell out of the Economy due to no need for
most Factories and the lack of uncounterfeitible currency).








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